Tag: Revenue Allocation

  • FAAC review flags weak responses from firms in road tax credit scrutiny

    FAAC review flags weak responses from firms in road tax credit scrutiny

    2025-12-29 09:00:00
    In an update published by Punch, FAAC’s post-mortem sub-committee reviewing the Road Infrastructure Tax Credit Scheme reportedly received responses from only three of seven companies contacted, raising fresh questions around transparency and project accountability.

    The scheme allows companies to build eligible roads and offset costs against future tax liabilities, making it a large fiscal lever that directly affects distributable revenue.

    The central issue now is governance: whether project valuation, scope, and delivery milestones align with tax credits claimed across participating firms.

    ThisDay reports that “a combined $577.6 million and N822.3 billion were utilised under the scheme,” while ARISE News says the panel is probing “the scale of deductions, transparency of project execution and accountability.”

    Echotitbits take: Tax-credit infrastructure can be smart—if procurement and monitoring are airtight. If not, it becomes a quiet drain on FAAC. Watch for the committee’s recommendations and whether disclosure rules get tougher.

    Source: The Punch — December 29, 2025 (https://punchng.com/faac-flags-poor-responses-in-road-tax-scheme/)
    The Punch 2025-12-29

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • States and LGs cut bank exposure by ₦547.5bn as FAAC inflows rise

    States and LGs cut bank exposure by ₦547.5bn as FAAC inflows rise

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-28 09:00:00

    Figures cited by Saturday PUNCH show states and local government councils reduced outstanding bank borrowings by about ₦547.5bn over one year, amid stronger statutory inflows.

    The report links the drop in bank claims to higher Federation Account distributions and the higher cost of borrowing under a tighter interest‑rate environment.

    TheStar.ng reported that “States and Local Government councils cut their outstanding bank loans by about N547.5bn in one year,” while TheConclaveNg cited CBN bulletin data that claims fell from “N2.68tn… to N2.13tn” by June 2025.

    Echotitbits take: Lower bank debt is good—but what replaces it matters. If states swap bank loans for short‑term contractor arrears or opaque “capital receipts,” the fiscal stress simply moves. Watch state debt transparency, DMO/CBN data and wage/contract arrears.

    Source: The Punch — December 27, 2025 (https://punchng.com/states-lgs-repay-n547-5bn-bank-debts/)

    The Punch  2025-12-27

  • FAAC windfall helps states cut bank exposure by over ₦547bn in one year

    FAAC windfall helps states cut bank exposure by over ₦547bn in one year

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-27 06:00:00

    In a review published by Punch, Nigerian states and local governments reportedly reduced bank borrowing by about ₦547.5bn over the past year as federation revenue inflows improved.

    The story suggests higher allocations gave some subnational governments room to refinance or repay costly short‑term facilities, easing pressure on monthly deductions and debt‑service burdens.

    However, analysts note that debt reduction is only durable if states also strengthen internally generated revenue and curb recurrent leakages, especially as oil‑linked inflows remain volatile.

    Echotitbits take:
    This is a rare “good-news” fiscal signal, but it can reverse fast if FAAC cools or spending balloons. Watch the next quarter’s allocations, states’ IGR trends, and whether repayment coincides with better capital spending rather than fresh borrowing.

    Source: The Punch — December 27, 2025 (https://punchng.com/states-lgs-repay-n547-5bn-bank-debts/)
    The Punch December 27, 2025

  • Revenue sharing formula review gains steam amid calls for deeper fiscal federalism

    Revenue sharing formula review gains steam amid calls for deeper fiscal federalism

    PunchNG (illustrative image)
    2025-08-24

    Writing in ThisDay, analysts argue Nigeria’s revenue sharing formula is due for a rethink, noting the structure continues to shape monthly allocations and fiscal behaviour across the three tiers of government.

    The debate ties into calls for deeper fiscal federalism so responsibilities and resources better align at subnational levels.

    Any review is likely to reopen negotiations around derivation, VAT sharing and constitutional constraints.

    PRNigeria: “RMAFC commenced a review of the revenue sharing formula…”

    The Punch (editorial): “for a new allocation formula…”

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: The hardest part is political bargaining over who gains and who loses. Watch for a formal RMAFC proposal, National Assembly timelines, and whether derivation/VAT sharing becomes the main flashpoint.

    Source: ThisDay — August 24, 2025 (https://www.thisdaylive.com/2025/08/24/issues-in-the-revenue-sharing-formula/)